Extensional Devices

Method

Extensional devices, as described in general semantics, are linguistic
elements that are used to take uncertainty and emotional aspects out of a
statement and create a more rational description.

The five extensional devices are:

Indexing adds back in specific detail, such as people's names,
locations, and so on.

Dating adds the dates when events occurred (so is just indexing
in time).

'Etc' is indicating that the whole story cannot be told.

Quotation marks are used to separate something out as not 'real'.

Hyphens bind words together in strength-making connections.

The first three of these are working devices, whilst the latter two are
safety devices.

Example

Not: Young people are lazy.
But: Young people whose parents give them everything learn to be lazy.

Discussion

Much spoken (and written) language not only has much left out, but has
multiple traces of emotional perception and other distortion. By adding

General Semantics was initiated by Alfred Korzybski, who said 'The map is not
the territory', indicating the maps in our heads are only indicators of the
reality outside, though we act as if the maps were real.